Published January 14, 2026 | Version V1.0
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Existence of a Stability-Regulated Flow Between Collapse and Blow-Up

Description

This paper presents toy-system validation results for the Chronos stability constant χ, treated as a dimensionless balance target between effective coupling and effective damping. Many nonlinear dynamical systems fail through two common modes: collapse (over-damping / over-diffusion) and blow-up (runaway coupling / concentration). A χ-regulation step is introduced by enforcing χ_eff → χ, implemented by tuning the effective damping relative to coupling. The method is tested across multiple system classes: (i) a fusion-inspired instability amplitude model, (ii) a Navier–Stokes-inspired vorticity amplification proxy, (iii) a discrete nonlinear iteration example used as an evolution-based precedent (logistic map), and (iv) a multiscale cascade model with an emergent geometry indicator. Across these tests, χ-regulation shifts trajectories away from collapse and blow-up regimes and toward bounded, sustained evolution. These results support χ as an operational stability regulator with cross-domain applicability and provide a reproducible template for applying χ as a tuning target in time-evolution systems.

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References

  • DeWitt, B. S. (1967). Quantum Theory of Gravity. I. The Canonical Theory. Physical Review, 160, 1113–1148, Feigenbaum, M. J. (1978). Quantitative Universality for a Class of Nonlinear Transformations. Journal of Statistical Physics, 19, 25–52.